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Difference between revisions of "Threshing Floors"

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(Created page with "Threshing Floors <ref name="term_81545" /> <p> among the ancient Jews, were only, as they are to this day in the east, round level plats of ground in the open air, where the...")
 
 
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Threshing Floors <ref name="term_81545" />  
 
<p> among the ancient Jews, were only, as they are to this day in the east, round level plats of ground in the open air, where the corn was trodden out by oxen, the <em> libycae areae </em> of Horace. Thus, Gideon's floor, Judges 6:37 , appears to have been in the open air; as was likewise that of [[Araunah]] the Jebusite; else it would not have been a proper place for erecting an altar and offering sacrifice. In Hosea 13:3 , we read of the chaff which is driven by the whirlwind from the floor. This circumstance of the threshing floor's being exposed to the agitation of the wind seems to be the principal reason of its [[Hebrew]] name; which may be farther illustrated by the direction which [[Hesiod]] gives his husbandman to thresh his corn in a place well exposed to the wind. From the above account it appears that a threshing floor (rendered in our textual translation "a void place") might well be near the entrance of the gate of Samaria, and that it might afford no improper place in which the kings of [[Israel]] and [[Judah]] could hear the prophets, 1 Kings 22:10; 2 Chronicles 18:9; Psalms 1:4 . </p>
Threshing Floors <ref name="term_81545" />
==References ==
<p> among the ancient Jews, were only, as they are to this day in the east, round level plats of ground in the open air, where the corn was trodden out by oxen, the <em> libycae areae </em> of Horace. Thus, Gideon's floor, &nbsp; Judges 6:37 , appears to have been in the open air; as was likewise that of [[Araunah]] the Jebusite; else it would not have been a proper place for erecting an altar and offering sacrifice. In &nbsp;Hosea 13:3 , we read of the chaff which is driven by the whirlwind from the floor. This circumstance of the threshing floor's being exposed to the agitation of the wind seems to be the principal reason of its [[Hebrew]] name; which may be farther illustrated by the direction which [[Hesiod]] gives his husbandman to thresh his corn in a place well exposed to the wind. From the above account it appears that a threshing floor (rendered in our textual translation "a void place") might well be near the entrance of the gate of Samaria, and that it might afford no improper place in which the kings of [[Israel]] and Judah could hear the prophets, &nbsp;1 Kings 22:10; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 18:9; &nbsp;Psalms 1:4 . </p>
 
== References ==
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<ref name="term_81545"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/threshing+floors Threshing Floors from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_81545"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/threshing+floors Threshing Floors from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
</references>
</references>